and earned the rank of Petty Officer 3rd Class, serving on the U.S.S. Admiral H. T. Mayo in the Asiatic Pacific Theater during World War II, with ports of call in the Enewetak Islands, Midway, France, Panama, Caroline Islands, Marshall Islands, Okinawa Islands, Philippine Islands, Japan, Sipan Island, Ulithi Islands, Hawaiian Islands, and Korea. With his shipmates, Al walked through the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan, after the atomic bomb strike in August of 1945. He earned the Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal, American Campaign Medal, Navy Occupation Service Medal, and the World War II Victory Medal, and was honorably discharged in 1946. Shortly after moving to Iowa, he met and married Esther Mae Phelps in 1949. Married 32 years, they raised four children in Lisbon. She passed away in 1982. He later married Dolores Strauch in 1984. Dolores passed in 2017. After completing railroad telegraphy courses at the Gale Institute, Al accepted a position with the Chicago Northwestern Railroad in Eastern Iowa. Always fascinated by trains, Al worked as a telegrapher for several railroad companies over the years, including the Chicago Northwestern Railroad and the CRANDIC, retiring in 1989. Al was raised in the Catholic faith and stayed true to his Catholic beliefs throughout the years. He was a member of St. John's Catholic Church in Mount Vernon and the Knights of Columbus. He was a proud veteran, a member of the VFW, and a 68-year member of the Lisbon American Legion Post 109. Al had a variety of interests, including taking flying lessons and flying around Minnesota as a recreational pilot after his discharge from the service. He took piano lessons after his retirement from the railroad, and also learned to play the accordion. He was a master at tinkering, and known to be a collector and keeper of things. Many people in Lisbon noted that there might have been a better selection of tools and hardware in Al's garage than at the local hardware store. Al was preceded in death by his parents; first wife, Esther; daughter Kathleen Opatz VanDaalen; siblings, Peter Opatz, Martha Shuman, Rose Miller, and five others who died at birth; second wife, Dolores; and step-son, Robert. The family extends its appreciation to the VA Home-Based Senior Care Program and the Meals on Wheels Program for assisting Al in living independently in his own home until age 90. Also to the staff at the Lisbon Rehabilitation Center and Essence of Life Hospice for the compassionate care and friendship provided in recent months. To read the full obituary, please click here: http://www.stewartbaxter.com/obituaries/Al-Opatz?obId=3354479#/celebrationWall